Texas Democrat Senate nominee James Talarico declared his love for 'trans children' in a 2023 podcast appearance
James Talarico, the freshly minted Democratic nominee for the Texas U.S. Senate race, told a podcast audience in 2023 that he loves "trans children," a remark now drawing renewed attention as he prepares to face whichever Republican emerges from a competitive primary runoff.
Talarico commented on an appearance on "A Superbloom Podcast" in an interview with actress Candice King, best known for her role in the television series "Vampire Diaries." When King asked him toward the end of the interview to name something he loves that is not friends or family, the Texas state representative offered this:
"I love — and I'm just going to say this because it's on my mind — the trans children who showed up yesterday at the State Capitol to advocate for their humanity. They shouldn't have to, but it was an inspiration to watch."
The comment landed around the same time Texas lawmakers passed a ban on sex changes for minors, Breitbart News reported. That timing matters.
A record built on gender ideology
This wasn't a one-off moment of sentiment. Talarico, a Presbyterian seminarian who has held his state House seat since 2018, has a trail of activism on gender ideology that stretches back years.
In 2021, he called the Texas Capitol a "hostile environment for our trans neighbors" and touted being the first office in the Capitol's history to add pronouns to official business cards. These aren't the moves of a politician caught up in a momentary cultural wave. They are deliberate signals of ideological commitment, delivered from inside a deep-red state legislature.
Consider the framing of that podcast answer. No one forced the topic. He wasn't responding to a gotcha question from a journalist. He was asked to share something he loves, and his mind went to children identifying as transgender lobbying lawmakers against a bill designed to protect minors from irreversible medical procedures. That tells you where his priorities live.
Abortion, federal buildings, and the full portfolio
The transgender advocacy is only one piece of Talarico's progressive portfolio. After the Supreme Court overturned the invented "constitutional right" to abortion in 2022, Talarico called on President Joe Biden to use federal buildings in red states to provide abortions.
Read that again. A state legislator from Texas asked the federal government to circumvent the will of Texas voters by converting federal property into abortion facilities on Texas soil. The proposal treated federalism like a speed bump and state sovereignty like an inconvenience.
This is a candidate who does not merely disagree with conservative Texans. He actively seeks workarounds to override their democratic choices.
The Senate race takes shape
Talarico toppled Rep. Jasmine Crockett in the Democratic U.S. Senate primary last week, which means the party chose the candidate with the more aggressively progressive record to carry its banner in a state where that record is political poison outside of Austin and the urban cores.
On the Republican side, Sen. John Cornyn and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton are headed for a runoff election after a very close primary race. President Donald Trump has yet to endorse in that contest.
Whoever wins the GOP runoff will face a general election opponent who has spent years building a record tailor-made for opposition research:
- Pronouns on state business cards
- Calling the Texas Capitol "hostile" to transgender residents
- Publicly celebrating children lobbying against a minor protection bill
- Asking the federal government to set up abortion access inside Texas despite state law
In a purple state, some of that might fly under the radar. In Texas, it is a gift-wrapped vulnerability.
What Texas voters actually face
The broader question this race will test is whether a Democrat can run on San Francisco values in a state that just banned sex changes for minors by legislative action. Texas voters passed that policy through their elected representatives. Talarico opposed the very premise of the law and publicly celebrated the effort to defeat it.
He is entitled to his convictions. But Texas voters are entitled to know exactly what those convictions are, and his own words make them impossible to obscure. When a man is handed an open-ended question about what he loves, and he answers with "trans children" lobbying against child safeguarding legislation, that is not a gaffe. That is a worldview.
The general election will give Texans a clean choice. Talarico has made sure of that.




